Acupuncture Utilization
This study is to describe acupuncture and chiropractic use
among patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain (CMP) at a health maintenance
organization, and explore issues of benefit design and electronic medical
record (EMR) capture. This study is a cross-sectional survey. Kaiser Permanente
members meeting EMR diagnostic criteria for CMP were invited to participate.
The survey included questions about self-identified presence of CMP, use of acupuncture
and chiropractic care, use of ancillary self-care modalities, and communication
with conventional medicine practitioners. Analysis of survey data was
supplemented with a retrospective review of EMR utilization data. Of 6068
survey respondents, 32% reported acupuncture use, 47% reported chiropractic
use, 21% used both, and 42% used neither. For 25% of patients using acupuncture
and 43% of those using chiropractic care, utilization was undetected by the
EMR. Thirty-five percent of acupuncture users and 42% of chiropractic users did
not discuss this care with their health maintenance organization (HMO)
clinicians. Among chiropractic users, those accessing care out of plan were
older (P < .01), were more likely to use long-term opioids (P = .03), and
had more pain diagnoses (P = .01) than those accessing care via clinician
referral or self-referral. For acupuncture, those using the clinician referral
mechanism exhibited these same characteristics. A majority of participants had
used acupuncture, chiropractic care, or both. While benefit structure may
materially influence utilization patterns, many patients with CMP use acupuncture
and chiropractic care without regard to their insurance coverage. A substantial
percentage of acupuncture and chiropractic use thus occurs beyond detection of
EMR systems, and many patients do not report such care to their HMO clinicians.
Source: Elder C,
DeBar L,
Ritenbaugh C,
Vollmer W,
Deyo RA,
Dickerson J,
Kindler L.
Acupuncture and
chiropractic care: utilization and electronic medical record capture. Am J Manag Care. 2015 Jul
1;21(7):e414-21.
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